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![]() Employment The facts and data below are amazing! This information has been compiled from various sources including employee surveys, employer surveys, court records, EEOC records, and professional and scholarly writings. It will certainly make you think differently about workplace conflicts and disputes. What are Employees attitudes towards workplace disputes? • A survey conducted in 1990 revealed:
25% of respondents stated that they had experienced job bias. 78% of respondents believe some, most or all employers engage in some kind of discrimination in hiring or promotion. 51% or respondents stated that all or most employers are guilty of discriminating practices. In an informal study conducted with 6,000 complainants at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology between 1973 and 1988, 75% of the complaints:
feared loss of privacy. say they do not wish to go to a third party, but feel that they lack the skills they need to change the situation effectively. believe they lack sufficient evidence of the offensive behavior. just want the problem to stop. 90% of harassment episodes are never officially reported. Rutter, P. (1996) Understanding and Preventing Sexual Harassment: The Complete Guide. Bantam Books There has been a HUGE increase in complaints and litigation over the past few years.
Federal Courts Study Committee, (1989) "Tentative Recommendations for Public Comment." Proposed Long Range Plans for Federal Courts. • The EEOC reported a twenty-two percent increase in charges of employment discrimination from 1991 to 1993. Bureau of National Affairs, Daily Labor Report, July 29,1994 at D20. The financial Risk has greatly increased.
Stickler, K (1994) "For Job-Bias Suits, Ballooning Costs." New York Times, Sunday, July 17, 1994, at p F11. • According to a nationwide study, the average jury verdict in wrongful termination cases is over $600,000 and companies lose 64% of the cases. "Without Just Cause: An Employer's Practical Guide on Wrongful Discharge," (1988) Bureau of National Affairs. • Annual monetary benefits for sexual harassment cases handled by the EEOC between 1992 and 1998 have increased from $12,7 million to $34.5 million. These figures do not include monetary benefits obtained through litigation. EEOC statistics at www.eeoc.gov/stats/harass.html • Annual monetary benefits for ADA cases handled by the EEOC between July 26, 1992 and 1998 have increased from $0.2million to $49,1 million. These figures do not include monetary benefits obtained through litigation. EEOC statistics at www.eeoc.gov/stats/ada.htm
Phillips, D.T. (1990) "The Price Tag of Turnover." Personnel Journal, Dec. 1990, at p 58. • Up to 30% of a typical managers time is spent dealing with conflict. Thomas, K and Schmidt, W. (1976) "A survey of managerial interests with respect to conflict. Academy of Management Journal," June 1976. • A more current study showed that 42% of a manager's time is spent on reaching agreement with others when conflicts occur. Watson, C and Hoffman, R (1996) " Managers as Negotiators," Leadership Quarterly 7 (1) 1996 • A 1994 study showed that 18 million cases were filed in U.S. courts at a cost of $300 billion, and that 20% of Fortune 500 senior executives’ time is spent in litigation-related activities. Litigation costs have skyrocketed.
Risser, R (1993) "Stay out of Court: The Manager's Guide to Preventing Employee's Lawsuits," Prentice Hall. • "Even when the employer prevails on summary judgement, he has usually spent $50,000 or more in attorney's fees, in addition to the organizations time and resources." McDermott, E with Berkeley, A (1996) "Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Workplace: Concepts and Techniques for Human Resource Executives and their Counsel." Quorum Books, at pxviii Opportunity Costs (lost); Time spent on dispute resolution is greatly increasing.
Busch, R II "The Conundrum: Conflict- The Solution: Designing Effective Conflict Management Systems," 16 Preventative L. Rep. Note 4 at 13 (1997) • "The median time between the date a lawsuit is filed and the commencement of a civil trail is 2.5 years." Busch, R II "The Conundrum: Conflict- The Solution: Designing Effective Conflict Management Systems," 16 Preventative L. Rep. Note 4 at 13 (1997) • Fortune 500 Senior executives spend 20% of their time in litigation activities. Stephen Rosenberg (1998) www.resolutionworks.org/cost_calculator.htm Many top corporations have responded to the rise of workplace conflict. A survey conducted by Price Waterhouse and Cornell's PERC Institute on Conflict Resolution of over 530 corporations in the Fortune 1000 category revealed the following trends:
54% of respondents indicate that cost pressures directly affected their decision to use ADR. 88% of respondents reported using mediation in the last three years. 23% of respondents use grievance procedures for non-union employment dispute resolution. (A decade ago only a small percentage used them.)
Delaney, J, Lewin, D and Ichniowiski, C (1989) "Human Resource Policies and Practices in American Firms". Bureau of Labor-Management Relations, no.137. • Corporations that have developed collaborative conflict management systems report significant litigation cost savings:
Motorola reported a 75% reduction over a period of six years. NCR reported a 50% reduction and a drop of pending lawsuits from 263 in 1984 to 28 in 1993. Findings from a 1998 survey conducted with 100 Human Resource executives in the US revealed the following:
63% have implemented training programs for managers and supervisors, 57% have developed employee grievance policies.
• Private companies have reported that by implementing an ADR program the overall costs of dealing with employment conflicts, including the total cost of the ADR program, is now less than half of what the company used to spend on legal fees for employment-related lawsuits. (Employers’ Experiences With ADR In the Workplace (1997), United States General Accounting Office) What do insurance policies cover?
McDermott, E with Berkeley, A (1996) "Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Workplace: Concepts and Techniques for Human Resource Executives and their Counsel." Quorum Books, at p 30. • Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) covers claims for discrimination or wrongful termination based on race, sex or disability. In a survey of 100 Human Resource executives, co-sponsored by Assurex International, the University of Miami and the American Mediation Institute, 48% indicated that they have purchased EPLI. EPL Survey Report, Assurex International, the University of Miami and the American Mediation Institute, 1998. |
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